Overview

For more than 80 years, NBC News has been documenting the
people, places, and events that shape our world. NBC Learn, the
educational arm of NBC News, is dedicated to making these historic
stories, images and primary source documents available on-demand to
teachers, students, and parents.

NBC Learn has already digitized more than 12,000 stories from
the NBC News archives — one of the largest news archives in
the world, dating back to the 1920s. In addition, collections are
updated with current events every day, Monday through Friday, with
stories from such celebrated programs as NBC Nightly News, the TODAY
show, Meet the Press, Dateline NBC, as well as the networks of
MSNBC, CNBC, and Telemundo.

NBC Learn is staffed by veteran NBC News producers, who have created
scores of original stories and Town Hall events around the country,
in partnership with the National Science Foundation, the Kellogg
Foundation, and others. These include such award-winning collections
as Chemistry Now, Changing Planet, Science of
NFL Football, Science of the Winter Olympic Games, and Finishing
the Dream.

Our original videos and archival news stories are correlated
to state standards and the Common Core, and aligned to more than 25
K-12 and 30 Higher Ed collections. Videos are generally short
— less than six minutes in length — enabling instructors
to engage and enlighten their students without wasting precious
class time. Yet these brief videos are full stories, with a
beginning, middle and end, reported by some of the most famous
journalists in broadcast history, including John Chancellor, Tom
Brokaw, Tim Russert, Brian Williams, and many others.

To deliver these stories in a safe, collaborative online
learning environment, NBC Learn has developed the most advanced
media player in existence. Called a Cue Card™, the player
supports videos, photographs, newspaper articles, primary source
documents, and other media. It is “flippable,” providing
bibliographic information, clickable keywords and a citation
generator on the back, a full transcript along the side, and
additional tabs along the bottom that let users annotate each
resource with their own research notes, and to save it to personal
play lists. The Cue Card offers a closed captioning option and can
easily be shared on the Internet or by email.

The collections of NBC Learn are available through Internet
streaming or for via download. They are also accessible as a
stand-alone resource or as a Blackboard building block, which allows
users to embed videos directly into Blackboard learning management
systems.

Our Help Desk is staffed 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and
is unmatched in quality of customer service. Subscribers are offered
free and unlimited training via Webinar. On-location training is
also available.

For a school, a district, or a state, NBC Learn has the tools,
technology and innovative content to meet all your 21st
century educational needs.

Join The Conversation

RT @DiscoverEorg: A2: We have #GirlDay2018 planning guides specially geared toward volunteers, parents and educators. Designed to help you…

Choose your product

For NBC Learn in Learning Management Systems
please log in to your institution's Learning Management System web site and
click "Browse NBC Learn".
For further assistance, please contact our NBC Learn Support Team and we'll be happy to assist you.

If you are trying to view the videos from inside a school or
university, your IT admin may need to enable streaming on your
network. Please see the Internet Filtering section of our Technical
Requirements page.

DVDs AND OTHER COPIES

Videos on this page are not available on DVD at this time due to
licensing restrictions on the footage.

DOWNLOADING VIDEOS

Subscribers to NBC Learn may download videos and play them back
without an internet connection. Please click
here to find out more about subscribing or to sign up for a FREE
trial (download not included in free trial).

The Science of the Olympic Winter Games videos are only
available to visitors inside the United States due to licensing
restrictions on the Olympics footage used in the videos.

FILTERING

If you are trying to view the videos from inside a school or
university, your IT admin may need to enable streaming on your
network. Please see the Internet Filtering section of our Technical
Requirements page.

DVDs AND OTHER COPIES

The Science of the Olympic Winter Games is not available on DVD
at this time due to licensing restrictions on on Olympic footage.

DOWNLOADING VIDEOS

Subscribers to NBC Learn may download videos and play them back
without an internet connection. Please click
here to find out more about subscribing or to sign up for a FREE
trial (download not included in free trial).